Molina's RBI double lifts Giants over Padres

Molina's pinch-hit double with two outs in the 10th inning drove
in Andres Torres to give the Giants a 1-0 win over the San Diego
Padres on Wednesday.

"I was too tired for (batting practice)," said Molina, who
started the Giants' first 13 games before Pablo Sandoval caught
against the Padres. "I had a couple swings in the cage, I was
warmed up and I was ready."

Molina's hit completed a two-game sweep of the Padres and gave
the Giants a 4-1 record on their homestand after the team lost
six straight on the road.

It came in front 26,593 fans, San Francisco's smallest crowd
since moving into AT&T Park in 2000, and left the Giants in a
much better mood as they packed for a three-game series at
Arizona.

"Today was a perfect win we can build off of," closer Brian
Wilson said. "Everyone contributed. I think it has to do with
being at home. Every sports team plays better at home."

That includes San Diego, which ended its 10-day, eight-game road
trip with a 4-4 record and three straight losses.

"We played three good teams and .500 isn't bad," said Chris
Young, who allowed two hits over seven innings but didn't get a
decision. "We'll take it, but we could have easily won a couple
more of those games. So it was decent but not satisfying."

Torres hit a one-out single off Edwin Moreno (0-2) and stole
second. After Eugenio Velez struck out, Moreno intentionally
walked Fred Lewis before Molina hit a ground-rule double that
bounced over the wall in left-center.

The Giants managed only four hits, but two came in the 10th. San
Francisco won despite scoring fewer than three runs for the
fifth time in six games.

"I figured they would go with Bengie, but he's been on the bench
for 10 innings and pinch hitting is such a tough job," Padres
manager Bud Black said. "Edwin threw a good pitch and Bengie hit
a high fly ball that we couldn't track down."

Wilson (1-0) pitched two shutout innings for the win.

Equally important as Molina's hit was the performance of
starting pitcher Barry Zito, who threw seven shutout innings and
lowered his ERA from 10.00 to 5.63.

Zito allowed just one runner past second base and kept the
Padres off balance with a mixture of snapping curves and a
fastball that was his most effective of the young season. He
struck out five and didn't walk a batter for the first time
since June 25, 2008.

"I just wanted to be aggressive today and let the hitters on the
other side earn it themselves instead of falling behind and
giving them free passes," said Zito, winless in three starts.
"As good a (rotation) that we have, we want to go out and help
the team more than the last guy did. Some of these outings were
pretty impressive, but I'm just glad to get a win today, too."

It didn't get easier for San Diego against San Francisco's
bullpen.

Scott Hairston doubled off reliever Bob Howry leading off the
eighth and was sacrificed to third, but left-hander Jeremy
Affeldt replaced Howry and struck out Brian Giles and Adrian
Gonzalez looking.

Young retired 12 of his first 14 batters and didn't allow a hit
until Travis Ishikawa's leadoff single in the fifth. He then
walked Juan Uribe but got out of trouble by retiring the next
three hitters in order.

The Giants got two runners on in the sixth but couldn't break
through against Young, who had three strikeouts and four walks.

Notes: Because of Thursday's off day, the Giants will skip LHP
Jonathan Sanchez's turn in the rotation and instead start RHP
Tim Lincecum (0-1) against Arizona on Friday. Giants manager
Bruce Bochy said Sanchez will be available to pitch out of the
bullpen for the next few days. ... Padres OF Cliff Floyd will
undergo an MRI on his right knee in San Diego on Thursday. Floyd
had fluid drained from the knee last weekend. ... Giants CF
Aaron Rowand got the day off.